I'll be frank and say that I think the rhetoric around climate action has become extremely polarized. Many political officials and leaders of various parties look to score cheap political points by overly polarizing climate action and using it as a political football. Doing so does a really criminal disservice to Canadians. While climate action might be a political issue that is, as Chris said, very worthy of active debate, it should not be a partisan issue. We should expect every party in this country to have something meaningful to say about climate change.
On the issue of carbon pricing specifically, I think it's unfortunate that carbon pricing has become a proxy for all climate action in the ways we talk about climate change in this country. Carbon pricing is really important, but it does not and cannot operate in a vacuum. We need to do a better job of explaining carbon pricing, but we also need to do a better job of explaining the ways in which carbon pricing works with other forms of climate action that we're taking, including ways in which we're looking to diversify our economy and create new avenues for prosperity and job creation in Canada.